Enhancement Of Syngas Production In Coal Gasification With CO2 Conversion Under Plasma Conditions

ABSTRACT

A process and apparatus for enhancement of syngas production (CO and H 2 ) of a carbon based feedstock with CO 2  conversion, which utilized CO 2  as an oxygen resource and converts CO 2  to CO through chemical reactions. The process includes a thermal plasma reactor and optionally a nonthermal plasma reactor.

STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT

This invention was made with United States Government support under Contract No. HR0011-09-C-0094 awarded by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. The Government has certain rights in this invention.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present disclosure is directed at the enhancement of syngas production in coal gasification. More specifically, the present disclosure relates to a carbon dioxide reduction process which utilizes carbon dioxide as an oxygen source and converts carbon dioxide to carbon monoxide in a plasma coal gasification process. The process utilizes a thermal plasma reactor for syngas production and carbon dioxide conversion.

BACKGROUND

Coal and other fossil fuels will remain critical fuels for the U.S. and some other countries. The development and deployment of lower CO₂ emissions technologies will be a key in delivering clean energy and climate control associated with fossil fuel use. In the recent years, global efforts in carbon dioxide (CO₂) capture and storage (CCS) are gaining importance in significant greenhouse gas emission reductions from the use of fossil energy. Carbon dioxide capture-enabling technologies in coal-fired energy area include integrated coal gasification combined cycle (IGCC), oxy-fuel combustion, and post-combustion CO₂ capture. These technologies are at different stages of development.

SUMMARY

A process for carbon dioxide conversion comprising supplying a thermal plasma reactor and introducing into the reactor a carbon based feedstock (C) and carbon dioxide (CO₂) wherein the thermal plasma reactor is at a temperature sufficient to convert the carbon based feedstock to carbon monoxide according to the following reaction:

C+CO₂⇄2CO

wherein the carbon based feedstock may be in the size range of 50 μm to 150 μm, the thermal plasma reactor provides a temperature gradient and the CO₂ is introduced into the reactor at a flow rate of 1.0 L/min to 10.0 L/min.

In another embodiment, the present disclosure again relates to a process for carbon dioxide conversion comprising supplying a thermal plasma reactor and introducing into the reactor a carbon based feedstock (C) and carbon dioxide (CO₂) wherein the thermal plasma reactor is at a temperature sufficient to convert the carbon based feedstock to an output gas comprising carbon monoxide according to the following reaction:

C+CO₂⇄2CO

wherein the carbon based feedstock is in the size range of 50 μm to 150 μm, the thermal plasma reactor provides a temperature gradient and said CO₂ is introduced into said reactor at a flow rate of 1.0 L/min to 10.0 L/min. The output gases of the thermal plasma reactor may then be introduced to a nonthermal plasma reactor wherein said nonthermal plasma reactor provides conversion of carbon dioxide to carbon monoxide according to the equation:

CO₂+H₂→CO+H₂O

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The detailed description below may be better understood with reference to the accompanying figures which are provided for illustrative purposes and are not to be considered as limiting any aspect of the invention.

FIG. 1 illustrates a process flow diagram illustrating the use of carbon dioxide as an oxygen resource to convert CO₂ to CO.

FIG. 2 illustrates a preferred configuration for syngas production for the process flow diagram provided in FIG. 1.

FIG. 3 illustrates the thermal plasma apparatus herein and two sampling ports: Sampling Port A and Sampling Port B.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The present disclosure relates to a carbon dioxide emission reduction process which may utilize carbon dioxide (CO₂) as an oxygen resource in the presence of a carbon based feedstock and convert carbon dioxide to carbon monoxide (CO) in a plasma gasification process. The process may utilize a thermal plasma reactor as the primary syngas (carbon monoxide and/or hydrogen) production. It may then optionally employ a nonthermal plasma reactor for further carbon dioxide conversion which may take place in the presence of other reactants.

Attention is directed to FIG. 1 which provides an initial process flow diagram. As can be seen, a carbon based feedstock such as coal and CO₂ may now be configured for introduction into a thermal plasma gasifier. Accordingly, the process herein may utilize a relatively wide range of carbon based feedstocks which may include coal, oils, petroleum coke, refinery residuals and/or wasters, hydrocarbon contaminated solids, biomass and agricultural wasters. With regards to the preferable use of coal sources, one may preferably employ lignite, sub-bituminous, bituminous, and/or anthracite type material. The carbon based feedstock is preferably introduced into the thermal plasma gasifier in particulate form, where the particulate may be in the size range of about 100 mesh to 300 mesh (50 μm to 150 μm). In addition, one may preferably introduce the carbon based feedstock into the thermal plasma gasifier at a rate of 5.0 g/min to 20 g/min and at all 1.0 g/min increments therein. For example, one may introduce the coal at a rate of 6.0 g/min, 7.0 g/min, 8.0 g/min, 9.0 g/min, 10.0 g/min, up to the level of 20.0 g/min.

The CO₂ for introduction into the thermal plasma gasifier may be obtained from a variety of sources and may preferably be recycled CO₂ that may become available from any downstream operation. The CO₂ may be introduced on its own as the delivery gas and optionally in the presence of other gases such as air and/or oxygen. The CO₂ may preferably account for 50% or more of the gas volume flow. Accordingly, it will be appreciated herein that the use of CO₂ as the carbon based feedstock delivery gas now serves as an oxygen carrier for the ensuing conversion to CO by a reaction with the carbon feedstock (coal) in the thermal plasma gasifier by a reverse Boudouard reaction. The Boudourad reaction may be understood as the redox reaction of a chemical equilibrium mixture of CO and CO₂ at a given temperature. The reverse Boudouard reaction may now be configured to take place on the surface of the gasified carbon based feedstock within the thermal plasma gasifier and may be represented as follows:

C+CO₂⇄2CO

More specifically, the reaction of CO₂ with carbon involves the detaching of an oxygen atom from CO₂ at an active site on the surface of the gasified carbon. the reverse Boudouard reaction may be written as follows:

In the above, the first step may be understood as the dissociation of CO₂ at a carbon free active site (C_(fas)) releasing CO and forming an oxidized surface complex [C(O)]. In the second step the carbon-oxygen surface complex may subsequently produce CO and a new carbon free active site. The first step is relatively slow compared with the second step, so the second step may be treated as an irreversible reaction. Accordingly, desorption of the carbon-oxygen surface complex is the rate limiting step. A reaction rate equation that reflects this mechanism may be written as follows:

R=k ₁ p _(CO2)/(1+(k ₁ /k ₂)p _(CO2)+(k ₂ /k ₃)p _(CO))

where p is the partial pressure for each component and k₁, k₂ and k₃ are the rate constants for the reactions noted above.

With respect to the introduction of CO₂ to the thermal plasma gasifier, the CO₂ flow rate may be configured herein to preferably provide a CO₂ concentration within the thermal plasma gasifier of 5.0 vol. % to 40 vol. %. More preferably, the CO₂ concentration within the thermal plasma gasifier may be in the range of 20 vol. % to 30 vol. %. The CO₂ flow rate which may be utilized may be in the range of 1.0 L/min to 10.0 L/min. It should also be noted that one may utilize the CO₂ as the delivery gas optionally in conjunction with other gases, such as air or oxygen. In such manner, one may include with the CO₂ delivery gas air and/or oxygen, where as noted above, the CO₂ volume flow may be 50% or greater and the air and/or oxygen (if utilized) account for any remaining volume flow. Within such parameters, the air and/or oxygen may optionally be present at a flow rate of 0.1-2.5 L/min, more preferably 0.5-1.5 L/min.

A more detailed illustration of the process described herein may be found in FIG. 2. Once again, the carbon source (preferably coal) along with CO₂ may be introduced into the thermal plasma combustion chamber. A plasma gas may be separately introduced which may be sourced from inert gas and/or air. The inert gases may include argon and/or nitrogen. Such plasma gases may preferably be configured to flow through electrodes within the spraying gun and exit at the tip of the nozzle. One may also separately introduce water vapor and oxygen via separate transfer lines and into separate nozzles that are positioned within the spraying gun. The relatively high temperature plasma gas stream will then react with the mixture of coal and reactant gases (air and/or oxygen) to produce a syngas (CO and H₂). It may therefore be appreciated that by adjustment of the water vapor introduced, the amount of H₂ ultimately produced may also be conveniently regulated. Accordingly, the volume flow of water vapor herein may preferably be in the range of 0.1-30.0%.

A thermal plasma reaction zone may be identified in the thermal plasma combustion chamber and will be related to the temperature and velocity fields of the plasma flow. The temperature of the center of the plasma may be as high as 10,000° C. More specifically, the temperature within the thermal plasma combustion chamber may be a gradient, wherein the temperature at the bottom of the chamber cools to about 200° C. Preferably, the temperature of the plasma may be in the range of 1000° C. to 1500° C. Such temperatures may be influenced by heat transfer from the plasma to the wall. During coal gasification herein, control of the energy flow density of the plasma flow, via use of a confined flow may offer additional advantages. Such confined plasma flow may be achieved by the introduction of a quartz tube (see FIG. 2) to the thermal plasma combustion chamber. Such confined flow has some of the following added benefits:

-   -   1) The flow is confined and does not spread radially and the         plasma region becomes relatively longer.     -   2) The carbon material, which is treated by the thermal plasma         flow, may now reside in the plasma for a relatively longer         period of time and the heat exchange from the plasma to the         carbon material may be more effective.     -   3) The plasma flow comes into contact with the wall of the         quartz tube and the wall interaction may affect the reaction.

Accordingly, to further increase the residence time of the coal particles in the hot zone (the region of plasma formation), as noted a quartz column may preferably be placed below the plasma spray gun. This allows for a relatively more efficient process for the CO₂ conversion to CO and H₂ herein through the reaction of the coal in the thermal plasma combustion chamber. One example of a quartz column that may be employed herein includes a quartz column that has an inner diameter of 4.0-6.0 inches with a height of 25.0 to 35.0 inches.

It may also be noted that heat transfer from the plasma to coal particles is one of the factors that will affect the extent of conversion in the gasification reactor. In the thermal plasma gasifier, coal is preferably injected into thermal plasma with an angled trajectory to the plasma axis. For example, the coal trajectory may preferably be at an angle of 45-60 degrees with respect to the vertical axis of the plasma, as illustrated by the down-pointing arrows positioned under the spraying gun in FIG. 2.

Heat transfer from the hot plasma jet to cold coal particles is spatially dependent on the transport coefficients, e.g., viscosity (μ), and thermal conductivity (k), and may be characterized herein by the Prandtl number (Pr), which is a dimensionless number, defined as the ratio of momentum diffusivity (ν) and thermal diffusivity (α):

Pr=ν/α=C _(p) μ/k

where C_(p) is specific heat (J/kg·K), μ is dynamic viscosity (Pa·s), k is thermal conductivity (W/m·K). Since k_(plamsa)<<k_(coal), there will be a uniform coal particle temperature and gradients in the plasma as coal particles are passing through the plasma, assuming there is no decomposition for the coal particles. However in practice, some coal decomposition is unavoidable.

Fourier's number (Fo) may b used herein for heat conduction characterization. Fo=αt/R², where t is coal particle heating time, and R is coal particle radius. Accordingly, relatively small coal particles herein will experience relatively improved heat transfer from the plasma.

Since some of the chemical reactions of coal gasification are reversible at high temperature, to improve the yield of the products herein, removal of heat is preferred which maybe achieved via a “quenching” or cooling operation. To quench the reactions in the coal gasification, cooling water jackets may optionally be installed to cool the reaction zone or the thermal combustion chamber itself. Another benefit of cooling is to prevent the chamber wall from overheating. In addition, some gases can be used to quench the reaction such as the inert gas or even additional amounts of CO₂. Accordingly, unreacted CO₂ from coal gasification from a downstream operation or CO₂ from other sources may be employed to assist in quenching. To achieve zero-CO₂ emissions, CO₂ may be separated from the syngas produced herein and the coal reduction reactor effluent to re-feed to the plasma reactor and provide cooling.

As illustrated in FIG. 1 and FIG. 2, the output of the thermal plasma combustion chamber may optionally be fed to a cyclone separator for removal of ash and the gases may then be introduced to a nonthermal plasma reactor (NPR). The purpose of the NPR is to provide for further conversion of CO₂ to syn gas (CO) which may be achieved by a reverse water gas shift reaction:

CO₂+H₂→CO+H₂O

The NPR herein may preferably generate a non-equilibrium relatively low temperature plasma through glow discharge. Accordingly the NPR herein is one which is not in thermodynamic equilibrium as the ion temperature is different from the electron temperature. That is, only the electrons attain the energy level typically found in the components of a typical thermal plasma. Therefore, the same type of reactions and oxidation that may normally take place at high temperature is possible at relatively lower temperatures. In the present disclosure, the voltage feed to the NPR is adjusted between 0-45 kV to provide a glow discharge.

The NPR herein may be preferably operated in the presence of water and an inert gas (e.g nitrogen) and CO may be produced due to the electron impact dissociation of CO₂. The possible reactions are therefore as follows:

(1) CO₂ dissociation in the presence of water. The CO₂ conversion in this path is relatively small. During the pulse discharge, CO is produced due to the electron (e) impact dissociation of CO₂. The possible reactions leading to CO and H₂ production are shown below, which may arise from the dissociation of CO₂ and water:

H₂O+e

OH+H→O+H₂

CO₂ +e→CO+O

O+O→O₂

(2) Reaction of CO₂ with an excited N₂ species. In a nonthermal plasma reactor at 200° C., extra CO can also be produced from the reaction of CO₂ with excited N₂ species, as observed in our experiments. The CO₂ conversion rate is less than 1%.

(3) The reduction of CO₂ with H₂. The CO₂ conversion rate is contemplated to be the highest for the identified three pathways. More specifically, experiments confirmed that 8.9% of CO₂ was converted to CO in a nonthermal plasma reactor at 200° C. in presence of H₂ without catalyst. The formation of CO is via the reverse water-gas shift reaction which is mildly endothermic, ΔH°=41.2 kJ/mol. One possible reason for relatively higher CO₂ conversion is the dissociation of H₂O under plasma condition shifts the reaction to the right hand side, which favors the CO₂ conversion.

CO₂+H₂→CO+H₂O

The competitive reaction, formation of CH₄ is via the following reaction:

CO₂+4H₂→CH₄+2H₂O

This reaction is moderately exothermic, ΔH°=−165 kJ/mol. The CH₄ yield is generally below 1%. Since there is no driving force for further reduction of CO to CH₄, the CO₂ conversion in this path is relatively lower. With the further conversion of CO₂ in the presence of hydrogen, the CO/H₂ ratios may be adjusted to suite specific utilization of syngas for the downstream applications.

EXPERIMENTAL EXAMPLES Test Setup for Coal Gasification

During the gasification tests, argon gas was used as the plasma gas (working gas), which was flowing through inside the plasma spray gun to create a plasma jet stream down-flow into the reaction chamber. Argon was also used as a carrier gas for coal delivery. The reactant gas, air or CO₂, was fed though a separate nozzle along with the coal feed stream into the plasma reactor. Reactions occur within the plasma flame and within the subsequent reaction zone below the plasma flame in the quartz tube (4″ O.D.×29″ height). The total volume of the reaction chamber is approximately 212 liters. Gaseous species and part of the coal ash are vented from the lower outlet of the chamber to a solids separator cyclone, in which the coal ash was separated and discharged from the bottom of the cyclone. Another portion of coal ash and slag that is formed during the gasification and settled down to the bottom of the chamber. In other words, this settled ash did not make it into the cyclone. The gaseous product was analyzed using two GCs equipped with TCD and FID detectors, respectively. Analytical gas samples were collected at fixed time intervals. FIG. 3 depicts the thermal plasma gasification setup and two sampling ports: Sampling Port A and Sampling Port B.

Coal gasification products were then collected from reactions with various types of coals with air as the additional oxygen source for the comparison of reactions with CO₂ as the oxygen sources. The production of CO and CO₂ components were evaluated.

Using Air as the Oxygen Sources in the Presence of Water

1. Lignite Coal

Thermal plasma gasification of lignite coal with air (1 L/min) and water vapor (0.15 L/min) was tested. The electric current for the plasma gun was 500 A, and the electric voltage was 30 V. The air flow rate was 1 L/min, and the plasma gas pressure was 75 psi. Before air, water, and coal were introduced into the reactor, the thermal plasma was turned on to preheat the chamber so that the top chamber temperature reached 400° C., and the middle section (outside the quartz tube) was 250° C. Then coal was delivered into the chamber. The average coal delivery rate was 7.4 g/min during the 20-min test period.

Table 1 lists the analytical results for the gaseous samples taken from Sampling Port A. The highest H₂ concentration was 13.34% at 18-min reaction time and then decreased afterwards to 11.41%; at the same time, the highest CO concentration was 10.73%, and the CO₂ concentration was also at the highest point (0.50%).

TABLE 1 Analytical Results for Thermal Plasma Gasification of Lignite Coal with Air and Water at Sampling Port A Sampling time, min H₂, vol. % CO, vol. % CO₂, vol. % 0 0.00 0.23 0.17 2 0.00 0.65 0.27 4 0.00 0.75 0.43 6 1.68 0.77 0.38 10 8.23 5.89 0.38 12 7.98 4.69 0.36 14 4.13 2.92 0.33 16 8.33 6.47 0.44 18 13.34 10.73 0.50 20 11.41 7.74 0.33

2. Subbituminous Coal

Thermal plasma gasification of subbituminous coal with air and water vapor (3 vol. %) was also tested in this period. The electric current for the plasma gun was 500 A, and the electric voltage was 30 V. The air flow rate was 1 L/min, and the plasma gas pressure was 75 psi. Before air, water and coal were introduced into the reactor, the thermal plasma was turned on to preheat the chamber so that the top chamber temperature was 400° C., and the middle section (outside the quartz tube) was 250° C.

Table 2 lists the analytical results for the gaseous samples taken from Sampling Port A. The highest H₂ concentration was 13.1% at 4-min reaction time and then decreased afterwards; at the same time, the highest CO concentration was 10.9%, and the CO₂ concentration was also at the highest point (0.3%).

TABLE 2 Analytical Results for Thermal Plasma Gasification of Subbituminous Coal with Air and Water at Sampling Port A Sampling time, min H₂, vol. % CO, vol. % CO₂, vol. % 0 0.00 ND 0.00 2 2.24 10.828 0.07 4 8.47 10.919 0.16 6 10.75 10.832 0.14 8 13.09 10.898 0.27 10 12.32 10.842 0.13 12 12.36 10.888 0.13 14 10.08 10.838 0.12 16 9.59 10.962 0.18 18 8.09 10.831 0.19 20 8.72 11.012 0.23

The temperature of the plasma gas may be controlled by the voltage applied to the electrodes in the plasma gun. The syngas yield form the coal gasification may be controlled by the temperature effects of the plasmas gas as demonstrated in the following experiments.

1. Subbituminous Coal in the Presence of Air and Water

Thermal plasma gasification of subbituminous coal with air was conducted. The electric current for the plasma gun was 650 A, and the electric voltage was 30 V. The air and CO₂ flow rate were both 1 L/min. Before air and coal were introduced into the reactor, the top section of the chamber temperature was 500° C., and it increased to 656° C. after the gasification proceeded for 20 minutes. The average coal delivery rate was 9.7 g/min.

Table 3 shows the analytical results for samples taken at Sampling Port A. For subbituminous coal gasification with air but without CO₂, CO and H₂ were produced with no CO₂ in the product. The H₂ concentrations changed between 15.37% and 10.40%; the CO concentration was at 11.59% at 10-min reaction time, and then decreased to 9.36% at 20-min reaction time. The fluctuation of the product gas concentrations might be from the unsteady coal delivery during the test.

TABLE 3 Analytical Results for Sampling Port A During Thermal Plasma Gasification of Subbituminous Coal with Air (1 L/min) Sample ID Sample Time (min) H₂ conc. % CO conc. % CO₂ conc. % A10 10 15.37 11.59 0 A12 12 11.90 9.42 0 A14 14 11.73 9.71 0 A16 16 10.40 9.07 0 A18 18 12.64 11.20 0 A20 20 12.04 9.36 0

Using CO₂ as the Oxygen Sources

Background Data for the CO₂ Introduced to the Plasma Reactor without the Presence of Coal

CO₂ was used as a delivery gas to replace argon flowing into the coal hopper. The CO₂ cylinder pressure was 75 psig, and the CO₂ flow rate measured with a flow meter was 5 L/min. To measure the CO₂ input from the coal delivery hopper, the argon plasma gas flow rate was the same as the coal gasification, and the gasification chamber was preheated to 500° C. with thermal plasma at 650 A and 30 V. After the system reached steady state (10 minutes from the CO₂ flow), samples were taken from Sampling Port B, and the analytical data shows that the average CO₂ concentration was 24.0 vol % as listed in Table 4.

TABLE 4 CO₂ Concentration Measured from Sampling Port B with CO₂ Delivery Gas Sample Time (min) CO₂ concentration (vol %) 10 23.8 12 24.2 14 23.9 Average 24.0

Coal Gasification Using CO₂ as an Oxygen Source

1) Lignite

To study the temperature effect, CO₂ effect, and oxidant (air or oxygen) effect on coal gasification, different gasification conditions were tested for lignite coal gasification: electric current (350 A or 650 A), argon or CO₂ as the coal delivery gas, air or oxygen as oxidant for coal combustion.

A. Plasma at 350 A, with CO₂ as Delivery Gas

Thermal plasma gasification of lignite proceeded at 350 A, with CO₂ as delivery gas, and Table 5 lists the analytical results for the gaseous samples taken from Sampling Port B. The average H₂ concentration was 5.80% at the 10-20 minutes reaction time, the average CO concentration was 18.44%, CO₂ was 12.74%, and acetylene was 0.53%. The average coal delivery rate was 13.6 g/min.

TABLE 5 Analytical Results for Thermal Plasma Gasification of Lignite at 350 A with CO₂ Delivery Gas Sampling Time (min) H₂, vol % CO, vol % CO₂, vol % Acetylene, vol % 10 5.85 18.32 12.63 0.52 12 4.76 17.81 13.38 0.40 14 4.90 17.05 13.67 0.52 16 6.20 19.04 12.32 0.61 18 6.44 19.51 11.92 0.62 20 6.65 18.92 12.54 0.49 Average 5.80 18.44 12.74 0.53 The CO₂ conversion rate calculation: 100×(24.0%-12.74%)/24.0%=46.92%

B. Plasma at 650 A, with CO₂ as Delivery Gas

Thermal plasma gasification of lignite proceeded at 650 A with CO₂ as the delivery gas, without oxidant. Table 6 lists the analytical results for the gaseous samples taken from Sampling Port B. The average H₂ concentration was 13.22% at the 10-20 minutes reaction time, the average CO concentration was 31.53%, CO₂ was 6.06%, and acetylene was 0.10%. The average coal delivery rate was 16.3 g/min.

TABLE 6 Analytical Results for Thermal Plasma Gasification of Lignite at 650 A, with CO₂ Delivery Gas Sampling Time (min) H₂, vol % CO, vol % CO₂, vol % Acetylene, vol % 10 12.46 31.46 6.62 0.13 12 12.64 31.62 6.56 0.10 14 12.74 31.50 6.27 0.09 16 13.97 32.04 5.81 0.10 18 13.44 30.99 5.81 0.10 22 14.98 31.50 5.31 0.10 24 12.32 31.63 6.06 Average 13.22 31.53 6.06 0.10 The CO₂ conversion rate was calculated as:

100×(24.0%−6.42%)/24.0%=73.25%

C. Plasma at 650 A, with CO₂ as Delivery Gas and Additional Air at 1 L/min. C.

Thermal plasma gasification of lignite proceeded at 650 A, with CO₂ as delivery gas and 1 L/min air flow. Table 7 lists the analytical results for the gaseous samples taken from Sampling Port B. The average H₂ concentration was 10.29% at the 10-20 minutes reaction time, the average CO concentration was 28.60%, CO₂ was 7.43%, and acetylene was 0.05%. The average coal delivery rate was 12.7 g/min.

TABLE 7 Analytical results for thermal plasma gasification of lignite at 650 A, with CO₂ as delivery gas and 1 L/min air flow Sampling Time (min) H₂, vol % CO, vol % CO₂, vol % Acetylene, vol % 10 10.85 30.01 6.46 0.07 12 10.33 29.66 6.97 0.05 14 9.00 29.22 6.74 0.05 16 7.04 23.92 10.93 0.02 18 7.32 22.32 11.80 0.06 20 10.29 28.60 7.43 0.05 The CO₂ conversion rate was calculated as:

100×(24.0%−7.43%)/24.0%=69.04%

C. Plasma at 650 A, with CO₂ as Delivery Gas and Additional Air at 1 L/min

Thermal plasma gasification of subbituminous coal at 350 A with CO₂ as delivery gas was tested. Table 8 lists the analytical results for the gaseous samples taken from Sampling Port B. The average H₂ concentration was 5.67% at the 10-20 minutes reaction time, the average CO concentration was 20.01%, CO₂ was 11.48%, and acetylene was 0.26%. The average coal delivery rate was 13.6 g/min.

TABLE 8 Analytical Results for Thermal Plasma Gasification of Subbituminous Coal at 350 A, with CO₂ Delivery Gas Sampling Time (min) H₂, vol % CO, vol % CO₂, vol % Acetylene, vol % 10 5.95 20.97 11.37 0.35 12 6.16 20.33 11.29 0.28 14 5.46 20.71 11.83 0.26 16 5.04 19.72 10.96 0.26 18 5.81 19.64 11.23 0.25 20 5.60 18.67 12.18 0.18 Average 5.67 20.01 11.48 0.26 The CO₂ conversion rate was calculated as:

100×(24.0%−11.48%)/24.0%=52.17%

2) Subbituminous Coal

A. Plasma at 650 A, with CO₂ as Delivery Gas

Thermal plasma gasification of subbituminous coal at 650 A was tested with CO₂ as delivery gas. Table 9 lists the analytical results for the gaseous samples taken from Sampling Port B. The average H₂ concentration was 14.33% at the 10-20 minutes reaction time, the average CO concentration was 30.43%, CO₂ was 5.46%, and acetylene was 0.12%. The average coal delivery rate was 14.8 g/min.

TABLE 9 Analytical Results for Thermal Plasma Gasification of Subbituminous Coal at 650 A, with CO₂ Delivery gas Sampling Time (min) H₂, vol % CO, vol % CO₂, vol % Acetylene, vol % 10 15.23 31.33 5.18 0.16 12 14.53 31.18 5.47 0.11 14 10.50 29.56 6.40 0.06 16 14.84 30.03 5.59 0.14 18 15.54 30.80 4.99 0.13 20 15.33 29.67 5.16 0.13 Average 14.33 30.43 5.46 0.12 The CO₂ conversion rate was calculated as: 100×(24.0%-5.46%)/24.0%=77.25%

B. Plasma at 650 A, with CO₂ as Delivery Gas and Additional Air at 1 L/min and 1 L/min Oxygen Flow

Thermal plasma gasification of subbituminous coal at 650 A, with CO₂ as delivery gas and 1 L/min oxygen flow was tested. Table 10 lists the analytical results for the gaseous samples taken from Sampling Port B. The average H₂ concentration was 11.13% at the 10-20 minutes reaction time, the average CO concentration was 29.76%, CO₂ was 6.92%, and acetylene was 0.04%. The average coal delivery rate was 13.8 g/min.

TABLE 10 Analytical Results for Thermal Plasma Gasification of Subbituminous Coal at 650 A, with CO₂ Delivery Gas and 1 L/min oxygen flow Sampling Time (min) H₂, vol % CO, vol % CO₂, vol % Acetylene, vol % 10 11.34 30.89 7.16 0.04 12 9.28 28.20 7.72 0.03 14 10.29 27.90 6.49 0.03 16 10.96 30.05 7.18 0.03 18 11.76 30.70 6.67 0.04 20 13.16 30.84 6.26 0.04 Average 11.13 29.76 6.92 0.04 The CO₂ conversion rate was calculated as: 100×(24.0%-6.92%)/24.0%=71.17%

Nonthermal Plasma for Additional CO₂ Conversion to Syngas

The nonthermal plasma reactor used herein was capable of generating a nonequilibrium, low-temperature plasma through glow discharge. Voltage is adjustable between 0-45 kV. It was found that voltage influenced the performance of the NTP reactor. At higher operating voltage, the glow discharge is relatively much stronger; however, some sparks were observed at 16.2 kV, and this indicates that the plasma generation was not stable.

Reaction of CO₂ (2 vol. %)+H₂O (1 vol. %)+N₂ (Dilute Gas) Stream in a Nonthermal Plasma Reactor

In the experiment, 2 vol. % CO₂ and 1 vol. % water were fed into the NTP reactor with N₂ as dilute gas. At 15.3 kV, CO was produced in 200 ppm from FT-IR analysis. The CO₂ conversion was about 1 mol %.

Reaction of H₂ (30 vol %)+CO₂ (2 vol %)+N₂ (Dilute Gas) Stream in a Nonthermal Plasma Reactor

During the NTP test of reaction of CO₂ with H₂, the volume % for CO₂ and H₂ were also 30 vol. % and 2 vol. %, respectively. The benefit of CO₂ conversion is to reduce the unreacted CO₂ from thermal plasma gasification, and to change the product distribution, because the CO/H₂ ratio will be higher. During the test, the preheater temperature was 550° C., and the NTP reactor temperature was 200° C. It was observed that without plasma, CH₄ was produced at 5 ppm, and CO was produced at 165 ppm. The formation of CO is via the reverse water-gas shift reaction which typically operates close to equilibrium, and is mildly endothermic, ΔH°=41.2 kJ/mol.

Without plasma, this reaction is temperature dependent. At 450° C., the CO concentration was only 20 ppm; at 500° C., the CO concentration was about 80 ppm; at 550° C., the CO concentration was about 165 ppm (0.85 mol % CO₂ conversion). The stoichiometric reverse water-gas shift reaction which typically operates close to equilibrium, and is mildly endothermic, ΔH°=41.2 kJ/mol. The formation of CH₄ is via the following reaction

CO₂+4H₂→CH₄+2H₂O

This reaction is moderately exothermic, ΔH°=−165 kJ/mol. Without catalyst, the CH₄ yield was relatively much lower than that of CO.

After the nonthermal plasma was turned on, the CO production yield increased significantly, and the CO yield was affected by the voltage of the NTP reactor. When the NTP reactor voltage increased gradually from 4.5 kV to 7.5 kV, 12 kV, and 15.3 kV, the CO concentration in the reactor outlet increased from 625 ppm to 780 ppm, 840 ppm, and 1780 ppm. After the NTP reactor voltage increased from 15.3 kV to 16.2 kV, the CO concentration dropped quickly to 630 ppm, and then increased to 1080 ppm and stabilized at this concentration. This shows that 15.3 kV was the best operating voltage. At 16.2 kV, the quick drop of CO concentration was related to the unstable plasma discharge.

CO₂ conversion calculation: at 15.3 kV, the highest CO concentration was obtained. CO was produced in 1780 ppm from CO₂, and the initial CO₂ concentration was 2%. The highest CO₂ conversion rate is calculated as follows:

$\begin{matrix} {{{CO}_{2}\mspace{14mu} {conversion}} = {100 \times \frac{\left( {{CO}_{2}\mspace{14mu} {concentration}} \right)}{\left( {{initial}\mspace{14mu} {CO}_{2}\mspace{14mu} {concentration}} \right)}}} \\ {= {{\left( {1780 \times 10^{- 6}} \right)/2}\%}} \\ {= {8.9\mspace{14mu} {mol}\mspace{14mu} \%}} \end{matrix}$

The methane production rate is calculated as follows:

$\begin{matrix} {{{CH}_{4}\mspace{14mu} {conversion}} = {100 \times \frac{\left( {{CH}_{4}\mspace{14mu} {concentration}} \right)}{\left( {{initial}\mspace{14mu} {CO}_{2}\mspace{14mu} {concentration}} \right)}}} \\ {= {100 \times {\left( {120 \times 10^{- 6}} \right)/2}\%}} \\ {= {0.6\mspace{14mu} {mol}\mspace{14mu} \%}} \end{matrix}$

The production of CH₄ was also associated with the operating voltage of the NTP reactor. Interestingly, the trend is opposite from the trend for the CO production. At the optimized operating voltage (15.3 kV), the CH₄ concentration was the lowest. One possible reason is that CH₄ is mainly produced from thermal reaction both in the preheater and the NTP reactor, rather than from the plasma reaction.

Temperature effect. When the temperature of the NTP reactor decreased from 200° C. to 100° C., at 15.3 kV, the amount of CO production decreased from 1780 ppm to 1340 ppm, and the amount of CH₄ production decreased sharply to 5 ppm. This strongly supported the assumption that CH₄ was produced from the thermal reaction, instead of plasma reaction.

Mechanism of CO produced from CO₂. The highest CO concentration obtained was 1780 ppm at 15.3 kV and 200° C. CO was generated either by direct electronic dissociation of CO₂ molecule from its ground state or from the anti-symmetric vibrational state of CO₂, which is an intermediary state of CO₂ dissociation as described in the following equation:

CO₂(Σ_(u) ⁺)→CO(X¹Σ⁺)+O

The hydrogen atom will react with O in the above equation to facilitate the production of CO. The formation of O via the above reactions is the control step at such input voltages. This is why the CO yield is relatively much higher with the presence of hydrogen.

The benefit of CO₂ conversion is to reduce the unreacted CO₂ from thermal plasma gasification, and to change the product distribution, because the CO/H₂ ratio is higher.

The results from the thermal plasma and NTP tests may be summarized as follows:

1. Thermal plasma tests

Thermal plasma gasification of lignite, subbituminous and bituminous coals with CO₂ as the delivery gas, air and/or O₂ was conducted at a thermal plasma flame of 650 A and 350 A. GC analyses showed that H₂, CO, and CO₂ were present in the gaseous products.

-   -   1) At 650 A, with the CO₂ as coal delivery gas, the highest CO₂         conversion rate for lignite, subbituminous, and bituminous coal         was 73%, 77%, and 88%, respectively.     -   2) CO₂ conversion rate increased with the thermal plasma         electric current.     -   3) Water vapor in the feed increased the H₂ concentration in the         product.

2. NTP tests:

-   -   1) NTP effect on the water-gas shift reaction (CO+H₂O→CO₂+H₂):         The highest conversion rate for the reaction of CO with H₂O was         0.34 mol % at 200° C. This implied that there was no significant         change for CO and water.     -   2) The reaction of CO₂ with water and diluent gas N₂: The CO₂         conversion extent was ˜1 mol %.     -   3) The reaction of CO₂ with hydrogen and diluent gas N₂: The         highest conversion rate for CO₂ was 8.9 mol %, and 0.6 mol % of         CH₄ was produced. It was also observed that, without NTP, the         reaction of CO₂ and H₂ was extremely temperature dependent, and         0.85% of CO₂ conversion was obtained at 550° C. in the         preheater.     -   4) The reaction CO with H₂: No significant reaction was observed         for the reaction of CO with H₂ under NTP condition.     -   5) The reaction of CO₂ and water vapor with coal tar model         compound indene under NTP condition. No indene was detected in         the outlet of the NTP reactor, and no significant amount of CO         was produced. Indene might react with the hydroxyl radicals         generated from water. The observed products were not identified.

The foregoing description of several embodiments of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise steps and/or forms disclosed, and obviously many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. 

1. A process for carbon dioxide conversion comprising: supplying a thermal plasma reactor; introducing into said reactor a carbon based feedstock (C) and carbon dioxide (CO₂) wherein the thermal plasma reactor is at a temperature sufficient to convert the carbon based feedstock to carbon monoxide according to the following reaction: C+CO₂⇄2CO wherein said carbon based feedstock is in the size range of 50 μm to 150 μm, said thermal plasma reactor provides a temperature gradient and said CO₂ is introduced into said reactor at a flow rate of 1.0 L/min to 10.0 L/min.
 2. The process of claim 1 wherein said temperature in said thermal plasma reactor is present as a gradient and is in the range of 200° C. to 10,000° C.
 3. The process of claim 1 wherein water and air are introduced into said thermal plasma reactor and hydrogen (H₂) is produced in said thermal plasma reactor.
 4. The process of claim 3 wherein the water is introduced into said thermal plasma reactor at a volume flow rate of 0.1-30.0%.
 5. The process of claim 1 wherein said thermal plasma reactor includes a quartz column.
 6. The process of claim 1 wherein said thermal plasma reactor includes a spraying gun which directs the plasma to define a plasma axis direction and said carbon based feedstock is introduced at an angle of 45-60 degrees with respect to said plasma axis direction.
 7. The process of claim 1 wherein said carbon based feedstock comprises coal.
 8. The process of claim 7 wherein said coal is one of lignite, subbituminous, bituminous, or anthracite coal.
 9. The process of claim 1 wherein said carbon based feedstock is introduced into said thermal plasma reactor at a rate of 5.0 g/minute to 20 g/minute.
 10. The process of claim 1 wherein the thermal plasma reactor generates output gases comprising CO and said output gases are introduced to a nonthermal plasma reactor.
 11. The process of claim 10 wherein said nonthermal plasma reactor provides conversion of carbon dioxide to carbon monoxide according to the equation: CO₂+H₂→CO+H₂O
 12. A process for carbon dioxide conversion comprising: supplying a thermal plasma reactor; introducing into said reactor a carbon based feedstock (C) and carbon dioxide (CO₂) wherein the thermal plasma reactor is at a temperature sufficient to convert the carbon based feedstock to an output gas comprising carbon monoxide according to the following reaction: C+CO₂⇄2CO wherein said carbon based feedstock is in the size range of 50 μm to 150 μm, said thermal plasma reactor provides a temperature gradient and said CO₂ is introduced into said reactor at a flow rate of 1.0 L/min to 10.0 L/min; and wherein said output gases are introduced to a nonthermal plasma reactor wherein said nonthermal plasma reactor provides conversion of carbon dioxide to carbon monoxide according to the equation: CO₂+H₂→CO+H₂O
 13. The process of claim 12 wherein said temperature in said thermal plasma reactor is present as a gradient and is in the range of 200° C. to 10,000° C.
 14. The process of claim 12 wherein water and air are introduced into said thermal plasma reactor and hydrogen (H₂) is produced in said thermal plasma reactor.
 15. The process of claim 14 wherein the water is introduced into said thermal plasma reactor at a volume flow rate of 0.1-30.0%.
 16. The process of claim 12 wherein said thermal plasma reactor includes a quartz column.
 17. The process of claim 12 wherein said thermal plasma reactor includes a spraying gun which directs the plasma to define a plasma axis direction and said carbon based feedstock is introduced at an angle of 45-60 degrees with respect to said plasma axis direction.
 18. The process of claim 12 wherein said carbon based feedstock comprises coal.
 19. The process of claim 18 wherein said coal is one of lignite, subbituminous, bituminous, or anthracite coal.
 20. The process of claim 12 wherein said carbon based feedstock is introduced into said thermal plasma reactor at a rate of 5.0 g/minute to 20 g/minute. 